If you could start again with cordless...

Another Makita user, here, although I did go into DW for 1st and 2nd fix nailers, however I have recently swapped to Hikokis for 2nd fix guns. Their other cordless tools look pretty good, too, if you can stand the green baseball boot styling that is. Not a fan of DW because as a company they are forever fiddling with products to reduce manufacturing costs (at which point the tools get poorer - see the decline in quality of the DW625 router as a case in point). Milwaukee, on the other hand are very innovative, but the build quality seems a bit poorer than Makita (I have Mak 18 volt and Milwaukee 12 volt stuff, too) and the first generation of of their new tools seem always to be plagued by problems (e.g the 18 volt nailers).

Just an observation, do you by any chance watch the YT videos made by Skillbuilder, Robin Clevitt and his sidekick Roger the plumber, Robin the Joiner loves his tools and sings Hikoki's and Milwaukee's praises, go and check out their videos if you haven't already
 
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400Nm? Ridiculously over powered to drive most wood screws, though, and will simply snap a lot of them off or burst bits not to mention being ruddy heavy. That's why most 18 volt 1/4in hex drivers are in the order of 140 to 180Nm. Would work well with bolts or nuts if it has a 1/2in square drive or on coach screws but not exactly an everyday tool for anyone other than a steel erector or scaffolder (at least on site)
 
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Abort abort abort! Found my bloody drill in the under sink cupboard..... my misses had kindly tidied it away and was oblivious what a “drill” was whilst watching me tear the house and garage apart. Relieved and slightly disappointed at the same time.....

Is there an appropriate time for domestic violence?
 
seconded on that 400Nm is way too much torque for screws, that's for impact wrenches.
 
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Just an observation, do you by any chance watch the YT videos made by Skillbuilder...
Yes, seen a few of them and found them interesting. Unlike them, though, I don't get freebies! (but open to offers...)
 
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400Nm? Ridiculously over powered to drive most wood screws, though, and will simply snap a lot of them off or burst bits not to mention being ruddy heavy.

Snap screws? Drive thousands of 5.5 x 70mm roofing screws and lots of 6mm wood screws and 7.5mm torx concrete screws. Snap very few. Rarely use it for nuts. Though it comes in handy for the odd big coach bolt.
As for tips only use impacts. And an impact resistant adaptor.
Work colleagues all have 200nm and I smoke them every time plus their machines are constantly breaking down.
As for weight the 400bl is 1.4kg and the 200bl is 1.0kg.
Strangely enough no one will use my 400bl at work.:D
Especially when its teamed up with the 1kg/8 Ah battery.
 
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Not cordless, though, and hardly a DIY tool, either (bearing in mind that the OP is a DIYer and the conversation was about suitable ordless tools for him). As to Thunderbolts or concrete screws, just how often will a DIYer need to drive them? And if you are only doing a few, coach bolts can be tightened with a ratchet or even an adjustable wrench...

You'll maybe find some posts I made about my P1cc some 4 or 5 years back if you look. Interesting tool, excellent at most tasks, bags of power and accurate on deep cuts (with the right blade), but poor visibility of the blade in some circumstances, and the tool really could do with a headlight - which is an odd omission when you consider its price and that one of the Mafell jigsaws the P1cc replaced featured just such a feature. Even cheap little Makita cordless jigsaws feature one, so what went wrong when Mafell designed it?
 
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Its a shame they don't make it cordless.
Yes I seen your post.
 
Can you seriously see them selling it? Corded is expensive enough. In cordless it would be even pricier and be tied to the Metabo battery system which is still somewhat limiting
 

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